A printable sheet to post on the fridge for sitters, family, and emergencies
Fill these in now so anyone can act fast. Keep this sheet visible.
| Contact | Name | Phone | Address / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Owner | |||
| Backup contact | |||
| Regular exotic vet | |||
| Emergency / after-hours exotic vet | |||
| Pet sitter |
So a sitter or vet can keep things consistent.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Hay (type, always available) | |
| Pellets (brand & amount) | |
| Greens & treats | |
| Current medications & doses | |
| Known conditions / allergies | |
| Litter & box location |
If the rabbit stops eating and pooping, follow these steps and call the vet first.
| Step | What To Do |
|---|---|
| 1. Call the vet | Phone the exotic or emergency vet immediately and describe the symptoms |
| 2. Check warmth | If the rabbit feels cold, gently warm it (wrapped warm pack) on the way to care |
| 3. Tempt with food | Offer favorite greens and fresh hay; never force water into the mouth |
| 4. Do not medicate blindly | Give gut or pain meds only as directed by the vet |
| 5. Transport calmly | Use a secure carrier with hay; bring this sheet and medication list |
Handling notes, hiding spots, bonded partner, or anything a sitter must know.
Post this sheet where it is easy to find. In an emergency, getting to a rabbit-savvy exotic vet quickly is what saves lives.